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Multimessenger constraints for ultra-dense matter

Authors :
Annala, Eemeli
Gorda, Tyler
Katerini, Evangelia
Kurkela, Aleksi
Nättilä, Joonas
Paschalidis, Vasileios
Vuorinen, Aleksi
Helsinki Institute of Physics
Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research (INAR)
Department of Physics
Doctoral Programme in Particle Physics and Universe Sciences
Source :
Physical Review X
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
arXiv, 2021.

Abstract

Recent rapid progress in neutron-star (NS) observations offers great potential to constrain the properties of strongly interacting matter under the most extreme conditions. In order to fully exploit the current observational inputs and to study the impact of future observations of NS masses, radii, and tidal deformabilities, we analyze a large ensemble of randomly generated viable NS-matter equations of state (EoSs) and the corresponding rotating stellar structures. We discuss the compatibility and impact of various hypotheses and measurements on the EoS, including those involving the merger product of the gravitational-wave (GW) event GW170817, the binary merger components in GW190814, and radius measurements of the pulsar PSR J0740+6620. We obtain an upper limit for the dimensionless spin of a rigidly rotating NS, $|χ| < 0.81$, an upper limit for the compactness of a NS, $GM/(Rc^2) < 0.33$, and find that the conservative hypothesis that the remnant in GW170817 ultimately collapsed to a black hole strongly constrains the EoS and the maximal mass of NSs, implying $M_\text{TOV} < 2.53 M_\odot$ (or $M_\text{TOV} < 2.19 M_\odot$ if we assume that a hypermassive NS was created). Additionally, we derive a novel lower limit for the tidal deformability as a function of NS mass and provide fitting formulae that can be used to set priors for parameter estimation and to discern whether neutron stars or other compact objects are involved in future low-mass GW events. Finally, we find that the recent NICER results for the radius of the massive NS PSR J0740+6620 place strong constraints for the behavior of the EoS, and that the indicated radius values $R(2M_\odot) \gtrsim 11$ km are compatible with moderate speeds of sound in NS matter and thus with the existence of quark matter cores in massive NSs.<br />25 pages, 2 appendices, 15 figures, 1 table. Differences from v2: Central energy densities added to all ep figures; additional figures added; additional fitting formulas added; additional references added; additional discussions added; baryon masses added to table; appendix on EOS construction added. Version published in PRX

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical Review X
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f3f247398d34f23d77c6dd06f397a930
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2105.05132